The proliferation of social media in the recent past has provided end users a powerful platform to voice their opinions. Businesses (or similar entities) need to identify the polarity of these opinions in order to understand user orientation and thereby make smarter decisions. One such application is in the field of politics, where political entities need to understand public opinion and thus determine their campaigning strategy. Sentiment analysis on social media data has been seen by many as an effective tool to monitor user preferences and inclination. Popular text classification algorithms like Naive Bayes and SVM are Supervised Learning Algorithms which require a training data set to perform Sentiment analysis. The accuracy of these algorithms is contingent upon the quantity as well as the quality (features and contextual relevance) of the labeled training data. Since most applications suffer from lack of training data, they resort to cross domain sentiment analysis which misses out on features relevant to the target data. This, in turn, takes a toll on the overall accuracy of text classification. In this paper, we propose a two stage framework which can be used to create a training data from the mined Twitter data without compromising on features and contextual relevance. Finally, we propose a scalable machine learning model to predict the election results using our two stage framework.
Ankit MauryaSatish LodhMayur JoshiProf. Vinaykumar Singh
Payal Khurana BatraAditi saxenaShrutiChaitanya Goel
Mahi VermaPrathamesh SuryawanshiSampada DeorePriyanka MundhePhakatkarParul SharmaTeng-Sheng MohD Rajeswara DrS RaoS UshaM KrishnaG Sai RamyaU CharanJee-VanFerdin JoeJohn JosephMeng-Hsiu TsaiYingfeng WangMyungjae KwakNeil RigoleJyoti RamtekeSamarth ShahDarshan GodhiaAadil Shaikh
A. YavariHamid HassanpourBagher Rahimpour CamiM. Mahdavi